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Role Playing (Games)

Can a Video Game Solve Hunger, Disease and Poverty? 72

destinyland writes "Dr. Jane McGonigal of the RAND Corporation's Institute for the Future has created a game described as 'a crash course in changing the world.' Developed for the World Bank's 'capacity development' branch, EVOKE has already gathered more than 10,000 potential solutions from participants, including executives from Procter & Gamble and Kraft. '[Dr. McGonigal] takes threats to human existence — global food shortage, fuel wars, pandemic, refugee crisis, and upended democracy — and asks the gaming public to collaborate on how to avoid these all too possible futures.' And by completing its 10 missions, you too can become a World Bank Institute certified EVOKE social innovator. (The game designer's web site lays out her ambitious philosophy. 'Reality is broken,' but 'game designers can fix it.')"

Comment Re:speedbump (Score 1) 624

That's nice, but I still won't use iTunes to buy music. Ever. I don't care if they don't do DRM NOW. They did it ONCE, and that was enough for me. Something like that should never have been done, let alone supported by customers, AT ALL. They'd still be doing it if enough people didn't complain. I don't trust Apple enough to buy into their closed system with an iPad. They made it incompatible with Flash so that people couldn't watch YouTube on it--instead, they'll have to buy content from the iStore or whatever the hell it is. It really scares me that so many sheeple are buying into this thing. Slashdot has a great "Borg" image for Bill Gates' face. They need a similar logo now for Apple for stories like these. As far as I'm concerned, Apple is just as bad as M$ ever was, if not worse.

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